Qondio
Front
Intel
IntelMart
Shares
My Qondio
Account
RichR > Intel > Multiple Sclerosis and Diet

qondio.com/saDc PRINT EMAIL

Multiple Sclerosis and Diet

My wife was diagnosed as having Primary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis in December 2005.
MS is an autoimmune disease. The protein coating of the neural pathways is attacked by the bodies own immune system. This causes scarring or lesions which means that signals from the brain to various parts of the body are slowed down or stopped. This causes a very wide range of symptoms depending on exactly where the lesions are located.

As well as there being no cure for MS, there are no treatments offered to relieve the symptoms of this type of MS. I don't know what it is like in other countries but in the UK, we were given the diagnosis and pretty much left to our own devices.

The only advice we were given is to have a 'healthy', balanced diet! When you begin to do research yourself, it is just the opposite. There is too much information. The problem is, who do you believe and which diet do you follow?

I want to do everything I can to support my wife. If there was a diet proven to help, I would adopt it too, to make things easier. But you need a degree in nutrition to follow most of the advice and I would have to say that the results are unproven.

As far as I am aware, there have been no large scale clinical trials of any of these diets. I'm not sure how there could be. How could you get a statistically significant number of people to follow these different diets over a reasonable period of time and measure the results? How would you know how closely people had stuck to the diet? What about factors other than diet?

One of the problems with MS is the diverse range of symptoms experienced. Every case is different depending exactly where lesions occur on the brain or spinal cord. So much so that some people still don't believe that MS is a single disease. So, if people experienced a slowing down of progression or an improvement in the symptoms, how could you be sure that it was due to diet?

One specific diet that I have heard about is the Best Bet Diet by Ashton Embury. He is a man whose son was diagnosed with MS, so he did his own research and came up with this diet . If I remember rightly, Mr Embury has a scientific and research background, but not in medicine or nutrition. Following the diet is supposed to have eliminated all of his son's symptoms.

We have a book by someone else who through diet, exercise and Chinese Medicine claims to have cured himself of MS. I am very sceptical of these claims of cures in individual cases. My own experience has been that doctors are very reluctant to give a diagnosis of MS. When someone seems to have been cured, I wonder if they had the disease in the first place. After all, no one thinks that doctors are infallible any more.

They have been of very little help to us. We go to see a consultant about every eighteen months. Well actually, we don't see Him, we see one of his minions. This seems to be more to do with compiling statistics for research purposes than being of benefit to us. You occasionally read something from them warning you off 'extreme diets' like the one above and alternative therapies. But they offer nothing practical themselves.

If there were proven, practical steps we could take to alleviate my wife's symptoms I would adopt them immediately. But to transform your whole lifestyle based on a leap of faith!

I would like to point out that I have no medical training myself. These are just my views based on being on the receiving end of the medical profession.

When dealing with important issues such as your health, be wary of information from the internet unless you know the source.



Contributor's Note

This is an edited version of an article that I first published on Hubpages.

External Links

The MS Society | MS Trust | MS Resource Centre | MS Active Source

Contributed by RichR on July 19, 2008, at 8:22 AM UTC.

Reactions

No reactions yet.

Rate This Intel

Please login or sign up to rate this intel.

Comments

Please login or sign up to add a comment.

Share

Copyright Notice

The copyright for this content entitled "Multiple Sclerosis and Diet" has been specified by the contributor as:

Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Details

This content may be copied, distributed, and modified, as long as a) the original author is acknowledged with a link back to the content page, and b) if the work is modified, the result is distributed with this same license. If you use this content according to the license specified, you must link to the following URL:

http://richr.qondio.com/

Login Here with
Any Email Address
Any Password
No account? Sign up.

Intel Contributor
This intel was contributed by RichR


RichR

Qondio Archive
May, 2012
123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031


2008
January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December
2009
January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December
2010
January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December
2011
January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December
2012
January, February, March, April, May

Sign Up
Not a member yet? Qondio is a powerful network for making it online. If you have a website to promote, we can help. Sign up and get in on the action.

About Qondio
Welcome to Qondio! Discover the awesome power this network can deliver by going to our About page. Or you could skip straight to the Sign Up form.

ABOUT
SUCCESS GUIDE
FEATURES
FAQ
ADVERTISE
CONTACT
USAGE POLICY
PRIVACY POLICY


TWITTER
FACEBOOK